There was a moment of stunned, painful silence, and then the little one tried apologizing. Raela's fallen ears tipped ahead to catch the scattered, frightened words. She hadn't meant to draw an apology out of her... “I'll go ma'am...” Raela stiffened. No no no... She was crying. What kind of monster was she if she made this pup cry? Regret drew her brows inward and up, and Raela's lips parted helplessly. “I'm sorry...” "No, no." she started gently, her sonorous voice cutting through the cold air. The woman's head leaned down below her shoulders, somehow hoping to make herself look less scary – as if that would help anymore.
But what was she going to say now? Raela still felt dazed under the realization. The matriarch's voice rose in pitch as she spoke. "You don't have to leave," she clarified, her eyes scanning the yearling's shrunken form up and down as if that would reveal any wounds that might have befallen her. Those were internal though, and she knew it. "Sylva," she started again, wondering if she could possibly explain this to the youth without traumatizing her. "...those things don't... talk." Maybe she ought to say this in a more relevant way. "They don't speak, like we do." This could all have been falling on deaf ears, but it was worth a try. She could understand why a lonely, terrified child might start talking to the foliage, but it didn't mean she was alright with it continuing to happen.